f ; A T H E R ufY with occasional v rising temperatures ted his" 8 REVIE V7 4 The editors review the AI Review on Page 2. mi (? 1 1 1 J 11 nm WW rO n M r Y Complete VP) Wire Service CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1955 , Offices In Graham Memorial FOUR PAGES THIS IZZUZ ' 4. .-4 i -1 ' , fA !'..- 'A r 4 ."1 i 4 . ' I r : :..t rf-f - . - r- - i A Cold Coed In A Bathtub Sally Roberson, the one in the Pi Phi's bathtub, is spite the 45 degree temperature during yesterday's annual 4 parade. She, M;s Grace Boney and other Pi Phis worked sat. ' ' n s PiKAs' Beat Dook Queen And Her Co'urt Ride In Annual Parad l torn ' moired U od ay.-- Vinvh wo I Una-Duke.- Clash Miss Eleanor Riggins (far left) was named queen of Pi Kappa Alpha social fraternity's annual Beat Dook float parade yesterday. The parade, which started in the early afternoon, wound around the r campus and town and ended at Woollen Gym with a pep rally, i fl Queen Riggins' beauty court includes (left xto right) Misses Bobby Lee Chapman, Sally Price, Anne Wrenn, Pat Howard, Patsy Poythress and Sally Price. . ' Leading Cheers At Beat Dook Rally Cheerleaders and students yelled yesterday afternoon at the Beat Dook pep rally, following the parade. Carolina meets its n cient gridiron enemy, Duke, today at Duke. '(Henley Photos) on By WAYNE BISHOP past may battle the ng-time. tradition that has inspired many sterling performances in the imnortant factor this afternoon when the North Carolina Tar' Heels ie Devils in "the same" as far as the two Big Four schools are concerned, buk in i888.the two school opened a eiirs that h5'beeh'ninp;ifal!c'ded,iii'-this'nrea for its heated rivalry. Many times imors Are Flying )ouf rumors and newspaper an of a change in Uni thletic policy, as well as A, the Faculty Com a Athletics met Thurs moon for its regular session. lor R. B. House, with e faculty group met, t firmly diseoujited re t the agenda was any : routine. faculty Committee on I is one of two advisory lile Chancellor, who responsibility for the .v athletic policies. The ''up the Athletic Coun eet Tuesday night, deludes alumni, faculty, ;nt members.) oro Daily News Edi ) Barrier reported yes jat the Faculty Commit--hletics had an agenda slightly from the Chancellor House yes J'led is "absolutely in- c group issued no to the press, and no f e present. It is be st the Tuesday meeting luetic Council will fol same policy also. Such Ith Past practice, rarlotte Observer, larg F m the state, has en ! tront-page speculation f us of big-time foot f university for several 4 ; According to the Ob L Ch George Barclay will L and Maryland's p ulibe brought here. I s contract expires af reasn, so discharging h simvy not -"uniract. olicy Council . meeting will be signifi cant beyond the mere picking of a football coach. One sports writer pointed out that the whole athletic program will be review ed in minute detail. Meantime, no official announce ment has come from the Chan cellor or other University sources. The concensus of most officials, notwithstanding their views on big-time athletics, is that to speak on the eve of the Carolina-Duke game would be in poor taste. "I never discuss such things while the season is . in progress," declared Chancellor House. On the other hand, the state press is discussing "such things" as it never has before. re- ai the, Athletic !'S SLATE "ml.. . """"a1-" ht AAVW, .11 d.y, t LBhn. Dulcathon Is Slated For Sunday At 2 The annual Dukathon, sponsor ed by Delta Upsilon social fraterni ty, will be held Sunday at 2 p.m. The Dukathon is a marathon race from the Carolina Theater in Chapel Hill to the Durham Post Office, a distance of about 11 miles.' The route will be along Franklin St and the Durham High way to the Durham Post Office. Among the cross-country run ners participating in the event are Glen Nanney, Marion Griffin and Russ Glatz. The first, second and third place winners will receive special medals and all other finishers will receive survivor's medals. All those interested may call ithM- t?m Glatz or John Sharpe at the Delta Upsilon house at 9 2371, according to Sharpe. DELTA SIGMA PI Delta Sigma Pi, professional bus iness fraternity, will hold its an nual pledge banquet and. rose dance tonight in the Carolina Inn ballroom. the rivalry between the two in stitutions has caused quite a change in the odds, but the upsets have come few and far between. The Jast notable upset was in 1940 when the, Tar Heels whipped one of Duke's best squads, 6-3. This afternoon the huskies from Durham will be favored to take their sixth straight game from the Tar Heels, but the lads from Chapel Hill are telling a different story. . Coach George Barclay's Carolina squad has been pointing for this game for many weeks. Undoubted ly the Tar Heels had rather beat the Duke squad than anyof the other schools on their schedule. After a luckless start, the Car olina group rebounded with three straight highly encouraging per formances, and now are in top form for the highly-ranked Blue Devils. Duke has gone through a schedule almost as rough as the Tar Heels, and have come out with a 6-2-1 mark. Four Carolina starters will make their last performance against the Dukes today j End Will Frye, tac kle Jack Maultsby, guard Bill Ko man and halfback Ken Keller all wind up their careers at UNC to day. Four other seniors are Cap tain Roland Perdue, tackle Wilson (See DUKE, page 3) k Queen Rigg i ns y Found It Gold By SUE QUINN Spectators at yesterday's "Beat . Dook" parade had one common comment to make: "It ought to be held in the summer!" In spite of a downtown Chapel Hill temperature of 45 degrees at parade time, however, a good sized crowd turned out for the annual spectacle, which made its way down Franklin St. about 3:45 p.m. Ruled over by Queen Eleanor Riggins and a court that in cluded Misses Anne Wrenn, Bobby Lee Shapman, Sally Price, Patsy Poythress,' Diana Ashley . and Pat Howard, the event was decidedly better than last year's rain-soaked attempt. The general opinion among the students lining 'the street seemed to be that there was nothing like a good cold beer to warm you up, and many also visited a Frank lin St. bakery for fortifying re freshments. Younger Chapel Hillians, out of school in time for the show, warmed their hands by thrusting them into enormous bags of popcorn. Probably the chilliest people in town were the shorts or bath ing suit-clad coeds on sorority and dormitory floats. Delta Delta Delta's entry, winner in the so rority division, featured large paper snowf lakes, - held by girls in shorts who littered the streets with artificial snow. Their slogan read, "Let's Snow Duke." Other winners were Delta Kappa Epsilon, Cobb Dorm and the Nurses' Dorm. . t Miss Sally Roberson, a Pi Beta Phi pledge, shivered noticeably in a bubble-filled tub to carry out the motto "Suds Em Down," and a Saint A displayed blue legs beneath an oversized foot ball player's body. But the bravest fgroup were Alpha Delta Pis, who shoveled real ice over a Blue Devil who was being "Cooled by" UNC." Rams of all sizes and shapes were in evidence, as always from Phi Gamma Deltas, roof high, to Cobb Dorm's, built over a miniature, car. And there was at least one real animal present- Kappa Psi hitched a little brown donkey to a cart that bore the legend, "Let's Make an Ass of Duke." Rivaling the queen's float for beauty was the entry of Chi Omega "Belles Peal UNC Victory." Six girls, in "Carolina blue" formals, held the blue streamers that rang a giant white bell. Perhaps the most appropriate entry in a collection that in cluded everything from clowns and bald eagles to the NROTC band was the Kappa Alpha float, covered with show and ruled over by none 'other than Santa Claus. With Christmas carols pealing out from record shop amplifiers, and store windows filled with gifts, it was the most sensible thing on the street. fr n n f ( U I j 1 f i i ' I COSMOPOLITAN CLUB The Cosmopolitan Club will meet tomorrow at 4 p.m. in the Library Assembly Room. The subject of the program will be "Folk Music From Aronud the-World." ROOM RESERVATIONS All women students planning to live in a dormitory during the spring semester have been re minded by Miss Isabelle MacLeod, acting dean of women, to make a room reservation in the Dean of Women's office before Dec. 10. BUT HE'S NOT SURE WHY: M schae, Los es See By CHARLIE JOHNSON The beer license of Michael Pappas, owner of Michael's 3rill on Henderson St., has been su spended for 45 days, according to Tom Allen, chairman of the State ABC Board. Pappas, when contacted, said he did not know the reason for the suspension. But Allen said the license was suspended for allowing an intoxicated person to loiter on licensed premises and to consume beer on licensed premises. The suspension, which began last Saturday, goes back to an in cident which happened last July, Pappas said. A man who was ar rested for public drunkeness on Pappas' property was found guil ty in Chapel Hill Recorder's court, he said. Pappas said he was later charged with the il legal sale of beer, but was found not guilty in Recorder's Court. Arising from this, a hearing was held before the Malt Bever age Division of the State ABC Board to determine if Pappas allowed an intoxicated person to loiter and consume beer on his premises, Allen said. . Pappas was found guilty of the charge, and an appeal was then made to the entire State Board, Allen said. The board upheld the decision of the lower division, and Pappas' license was then su spended, he said. John Manning, Chapel Hill attorney, handled r License the case for Pappas, according to Allen. t Pappas said he could see no reason for suspension, since he had been found not guilty of the charge brought against him in Recorder's Court. , But Chairman Allen, when contacted and tgld of Pappas' ' statement, said the two charges were entirely different ones, and there was no correlation betweerf them. They were two different charges arising from the same in cident, he said. The officer investigating the , incident saw the man drinking beer, not buying it, and testified at the hearings in Raleigh that the man was intoxicated, AlleA said. J ' ir ji Talk On Its Power Slated Next week promises to be a big one for the University. A professors' group will sponsor a discussion Thursday by Acting President Purks and Ma j. L. P. McLendon of the State Board of Higher Education on the lelationship of the University to the board. And the, Board of Higher Edu cation, which has supreme power in North Carolina's education af fairs, wil meet here Tuesday and Wednesday. The Thursday discussion will be open to the public. Sponsored by the local chapter of the Ameri can Assn. of University Professors, it will be held in the faculty lounge of Morehead Building at 7:30 p.m. Major McLendon, from Greensboro, was a member of the UNC Board of Trustees until last spring, when the General Assembly failed to re-elect him to the body. At the AAUP meeting, the rea sons of the board's creation, the problem the board faces and what it hopes to accomplish will be dis cussed by Purks and Major Mc Lendon. A recent report by the AAUP Special Committee on the Presi dency stated "basic questions have been raised in several circles about the futuxe of the Consolidated Un iversity, and especially about its relationship to the new Board of Higher Education. "We feel that the kind of person needed and the kind of person ob tainable' for the University presi dency will be deeply affected by the answers to these questions," continued the report. ' FL n n n r Visiting Coming The full Visiting Committee of the Board of Trustees will meet here Monday. The meeting, which will be held in the faculty lounge of the More head Building, will convene at 10 a.m., at which time the committee will hear reports from the faculty and administration members. The meeting wrill be. over at lunchtime. Committee Chairman William P. Saunders of Aberdeen will preside at the meeting. Presenting reports to the com mittee will be Chancellor Robert House; Dean of the Faculty C. P. Spruill; Business Manager Claude Teague; Dean of Student Affairs Fred Weaver; Director of the Di vision of Health Affairs Henry T. Clark, and Director of Develop- Cor n t Eli a sh ii M on da ' ment and Public Relations Charts j U. Shaffer. j Other committee members, in j addition to Saunders, are Mrs. Ed Anderson, West Jefferson; John D. Larkins, Trenton; D. L. Ward, New Bern; Mrs. Rosa B .Parker, Albemarle; Victor S. Bryant, Dur ham; j J. Hampton Price, Leaksville; II. L. Riddle, Morganton; Floyd Crouse, Sparta; Hill Yarborough, Louisburg; Mrs. Mebane Burgwyn, Jackson, and Robert M. Ilanes, . Winston-Salem. j According to Shaffer, any mem ber of the faculty or student body . wishing to attend the meeting should either contact Chairman Saunders directly or through . Chancellor House's office. 'TAKE STOCK OF THE PROGRAM:' IDC Prexy Cites Lac! Of Intramural Interes "Dying interest" in the intra mural athletics program was brought to the attention of the In terdormitory Council at its meet ing this week. President Lewis Brumfield warn ed council , representatives that ithe entire intra-dormitory compet itive program was being endanger ed by the apparent apathetic atti tude some of the dorms were tak ing. "Take stock of the program in your own dorm," Brumfield told the group, "and flush your in tramural, manager if it is apparent he isn't doing his job." J. S. Lennon, associate 'admin- pealed to dormitory officers for treatment of Gravely's tubercular patients. Lennon pointed out that most of the local sanatorium's pa tients were charity cases and could n't round up sufficient donors to supply their blood needs. Delaine Bradsher, president of Old East Dormitory, was named to fill a vacancy on the IDC Court. Symphony Orchestra To Play On Tuesday The UNC Symphony" Orchestra, under the baton of Associate Con ductor Edgar Alden, will present a concert in Hill Hall Tuesday night at 8 o'clock. As a tribute to Sibelius, who will the. orchestra will perform the Finnish composer's "Symphony No. 2 in D Major." The other works in cluded on this seventh of the Tues day Evening Series are Beethoven's "Egnont Overture" and Handel's Suite from "Music for the Royal Fireworks." - IN THE INFIRMARY . Symposium Hopes For RadioTV Coverage Possibilities for radio and tele vision coverage of the forthcoming Carolina Symposium lectures were discussed yesterday at a meeting of the physical arrangement com mittee. According to committee Chair man Jim Exum, it is hoped that arrangements can be made for na tional and state-wide coverage of some of the evening sessions. Fin al plans cannot be made, how ever, until the list of speakers is completed. Students in the Infirmary yes therday included: Miss Martha A. Che k. Miss Marguerite E. Ward, Miss Tiu line E. Stribiing, Miss Jani L. Proctor, Miss Isabelle S. Mtsr son, James L. Nichols, William R. King, Gerald L. Bass, Charlts B. Rhoades, Hasseli G. Hal!, Douglas B. Dewing, Michael D. Berger, Edward J. Miller, Jchn D. Moller, Sam B. Andrews, Ji ' i B. Mason, William A. Dism ? duros, Louie C. Johnson, tiiriry C. Randall, Daniel Lanier Jr., Robert M. Olson Jr., Alvin v. . Smith, Wade A. Bowles and Jzhn S. Gonella Jr.

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view